/1/107844/coverbig.jpg?v=373fef407ba575864060c53c12b2887b)
if a semi-truck had parked directly on her skull. She kept her eyes squeezed shut, afraid that letting in even a sliver of light would shatter her h
It was hard
s snapp
veal the situation. She was in a bed the size of a small island. The sheets were high-thread-count Egyptian cotton,
mped a hand over her mouth to stifl
ve bar where she tried to drown the sorrow of her father's latest medical bill. The sleazy guy who wouldn't take no for a
Sharp jawline, dark stubble, a nose that looked like it ha
This was The Pierre Hotel. This was a penthouse suite. And thi
ort. A high-end, ex
. And now, she had likely racked up a bill for services she couldn't even rem
to mov
er dress-a thrift store find that had seen better days-was in a heap on the carpe
other was under the nightstand. As she reached for the second
h
in the silent roo
brow furrowed, and a low, guttu
Her heart hammered against her ribs
over, burying his face in the pill
t felt like theft. Even if it was a mistake, services were rendered.
ds and crumpled receipts. Tucked in the back was a single, crisp one-hundre
asting iron. She p
t was an insult. A hundred dollars for a night in the Pierre penthouse with a man wearing a watch like that? It was laughable. But it was all she had. And some s
cceptable. Ke
as petty. It was all t
sh carpet swallowing her footsteps. She slipped into the hallway, t
ther hour until the biological clock of a man w
ders opene
his mind sharpening like a blade. He reached out, expectin
ling a map of defined muscle. He rubbed a hand over his face, feelin
ifted to th
fro
and a piece of currency. He picked up the bill first. B
ed up t
was ac
rds. The ink was smudge
o throb. The air in the room
ntrolled a four-billion-dollar empire. He could bu
him a hundred bucks and rated h
in his fist, his knu
ury. "Preston. Pull the security footage from the penthou
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